Sunday, September 18, 2011

In Diamonds’ Flaws, Finding Clues to Earth’s Carbon Cycle

Diamonds that once lay more than 435 miles beneath the earth’s surface have provided researchers with an unexpected window into the planet’s history.
 The diamonds, during their formation, captured evidence that slabs of the ocean floors descend deep beneath the earth’s surface, recycling carbon between the oceans and the earth’s mantle, the shell of rock, about 1,800 miles thick, that lies directly beneath the earth’s surface.
Understanding the fate of the slabs will help scientists better understand the earth’s carbon cycle and all the processes that depend on it, from the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to the carbon compounds in living organisms and the formation of hydrocarbons in oil and gas.
Objects that resemble ocean slabs can be seen in seismic recordings, but they lie far too deep for any drill to sample. Impurities in the diamonds contain chemical signatures of the extinct ocean floor, evidence that the slabs have been cycled deep into the earth’s mantle, says a research team led by Michael J. Walter of the University of Bristol in England.
These microscopic impurities, derived from rock and from organic material in creatures that once lived on an ancient ocean floor, have undergone an amazing journey. The ocean floor rock, basalt, along with the sediment that built up on top of it, was drawn down at the edge of an ocean as part of the conveyor-belt mechanism that moves the continents.
When the slab of ocean floor had plunged 435 miles beneath the surface, minerals from the basalt were encapsulated inside the diamonds that formed at these depths.
The diamonds continued to descend with the slab of ocean floor until they experienced two elevator rides back to the surface. A rising mass of solid rock known as a mantle plume carried them slowly back toward the upper mantle, and the heat of the plume then propelled to the surface an explosive jet of molten kimberlite, a volcanic rock that preserves diamonds.
Eons later, the diamonds were mined by the Rio Tinto Group from Juina in Brazil. The company allowed members of the research team to sift through stones not deemed to be of gem quality. After examining thousands of diamonds, the researchers found just six that seemed to be of superdeep origin.
Despite their deep origin, the Juina diamonds are comparatively young as diamonds go. They were formed only 100 million years ago. Most gem-quality diamonds are 1 billion to 3.5 billion years old, and originate at shallower depths, in the keels beneath the cratons, the ancient blocks of rock that form the hearts of the earth’s continental masses.
The impurities that make the superdeep diamonds useless to the jeweler are invaluable to the scientist. From the inclusions in the six Juina diamonds, Dr. Walter’s team was able to infer the existence of two minerals that form only in conditions that exist 435 miles or deeper below the earth’s surface. The composition of the two minerals matched the basalt of which the ocean floor is made, showing that slabs of ocean floor had reached this depth,the researchers reported online on Thursday in the journal Science.
In another test, they showed that the carbon in the impurities contained less than usual of the isotope known as carbon 13, a signature of organic carbon at the surface of the earth that has been processed by living organisms.
Researchers are delighted that so much information about major geological processes can be gleaned from the microscopic impurities in the superdeep diamonds. “The superdeeps will probably emerge in the next 10 years as some of the strongest evidence for deep movements and pathways in the earth’s mantle,” said Steven B. Shirey of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, a member of Dr. Walter’s team.
Thomas Stachel, an expert on diamond geochemistry at the University of Alberta in Canada, said, “Here you have a beautiful demonstration that the oceanic plate cycle is not relatively shallow, as many people assume, but that the subducted plate makes it down to the deep mantle and is brought back to the surface by a mantle plume.”
In Dr. Walter’s laboratory, the superdeep diamonds are polished with a jeweler’s polishing wheel until the precious impurities within them are exposed. With a variety of spectroscopic tests, the researchers then measure the composition of the minerals within the impurities.
The discovery that carbon from the ocean floor can be mixed so deep within the mantle raises the larger question of how much of the ocean floor and sediments are carried to the deep mantle. Given the importance of carbon to life, scientists seek to understand the major reservoirs of carbon in the earth and the exchanges between them, both in space and in time.
“The mantle is the biggest reservoir of carbon, and we know very little about it,” Dr. Walter said.
“This won’t affect climate tomorrow, but what our results tell you is that carbon from the surface can go all the way into the lower mantle, which may be a long-term sink for carbon.”

Scientists Discover 12 New Frog Species in India

India New FrogsNEW DELHI -- Years of combing tropical mountain forests, shining flashlights under rocks and listening for croaks in the night have paid off for a team of Indian scientists which has discovered 12 new frog species plus three others thought to have been extinct.

It's a discovery the team hopes will bring attention to India's amphibians and their role in gauging the health of the environment.
Worldwide, 32 percent of the world's known amphibian species are threatened with extinction, largely because of habitat loss or pollution, according to the group Global Wildlife Conservation.






"Frogs are extremely important indicators not just of climate change, but also pollutants in the environment," said the project's lead scientist, biologist Sathyabhama Das Biju of the University of Delhi.
Many of the newly found frogs in India are rare and are living in just a single area, so they will need rigorous habitat protection, Biju told The Associated Press on Saturday. "Unfortunately in India, conservation has basically focused on the two most charismatic animals -- the elephant and the tiger. For amphibians there is little interest, little funding, and frog research is not easy."
Night frogs are extremely hard to find, coming out only at dark and during the monsoon season, living either in fast-flowing streams or on moist forest ground.
Biju said he and his student researchers had to sit in dark, damp forests listening for frog sounds and shining flashlights under rocks and across riverbeds. They confirmed the new species by description as well as genetics.
The 12 new species include the meowing night frog, whose croak sounds more like a cat's call, the jog night frog, unique in that both the males and females watch over the eggs, and the Wayanad night frog, which grows to about the size of a baseball or cricket ball. "It's almost like a monster in the forest floor, a huge animal for a frog, leaping from one rock to another," Biju said.
Three other species were rediscovered, including the Coorg night frog described 91 years ago, after scientists "had completely ignored these animals, thinking they were lost."
The discoveries -- published in the latest issue of international taxonomy journal Zootaxa -- bring the known number of frogs in India to 336. Biju estimated this was only around half of what is in the wild, and said none of India's amphibians are yet being studied for biological compounds that could be of further use in science.
"We first have to find the species, know them and protect them, so that we can study them for their clinical importance," he said.
Biju is credited with discovering dozens of new Indian frog species during his 35-year career.


NASA satellite is expected to fall to Earth soon


Sometime soon -- say around Sept. 23, give or take a day or two -- a 6-ton, 35-foot-long satellite will fall out of the sky, NASA warns.UARS
But don't be alarmed. Donald J. Kessler, a retired senior scientist for orbital debris research at NASA, says you've got nothing to worry about. The chance of getting hit is remote. Very remote.
That's not to say NASA isn't taking the situation seriously.
In a news release on its website, the space agency said it will post updates weekly up until four days before the anticipated reentry, then daily until about 24 hours before reentry, and then at about 12-hours, six hours and two hours before the thing actually plummets to earth.
The updates will come from the Joint Space Operations Center of U.S. Strategic Command at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, a group that works around the clock "detecting, identifying and tracking all man-made objects in Earth-orbit, including space junk."
For his part, Kessler thinks all the fuss is a little ridiculous.
In an interview with The Times, he said that about one piece of space debris, or space junk if you prefer, falls out of orbit daily. The public generally doesn't hear about such events because the debris usually burns up in Earth's atmosphere. Kessler said it's almost impossible to predict where a piece of space debris that does not burn up in the atmosphere might fall.
"These things make it around the Earth once every 90 minutes," he said. "It could enter anywhere on that path, so you can't predict where it will be."
The unpredictable satellite in question is NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (you can call it  UARS), which was launched into space in September 1991 and was decommissioned in 2005. For the record, no one thinks a 6-ton satellite will come hurling out of the sky in one piece. Scientists expect the spacecraft to break into roughly two-dozen pieces during its reentry.
Not all of those pieces will burn up.
If you're lucky enough to find a piece of the satellite, you cannot legally keep it or sell it. Even out of orbit, that satellite is property of NASA.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Google Chrome gets automatic single sign-on, brings security risks


Google Chrome single sign-inGoogle really wants you to use its web apps, and it really, really wants you to use Chrome. That’s why the company works so hard on making sure its browser and apps play nice together — and more nicely than Firefox,Internet Explorer, and Opera.
That’s no surprise since Chrome is fast becoming the preferred gateway to all things Google in the cloud. Just last week, offline access to Gmail returned (but only for Chrome!) — and now, further streamlining your access to the cloud, Chrome has now added an auto-login option to its experimental about:flags page.
With “pre- and auto-login” enabled, Chrome stores authentication details for the Google account you’ve set up in your sync options as a cookie. That cookie enables single sign-on at any Google Account-enabled web page (like Gmail, Google Docs, Google Reader, Picasa, etc.). No more re-entering your password on Gmail after you’ve logged in on Google Reader: just load the page and watch it auto-refresh.
There’s also mention of a Chrome infobar (like those that appear to translate or block scripts) being displayed when a compatible page is detected, hinting that Chrome’s auto-login might be available to third-party sites across the web, similar to what Mozilla has been working on with BrowserID.
Right now, auto-login is hidden behind a flag. That’s a good thing, because there’s a security issue that needs to be sorted out before it’s made a default.
While the option to automatically sign in to Google apps is a convenience, the setting would also allow anyone that can double-click the Chrome icon on your desktop to access all your Google data without knowing your password. Since Chrome currently lacks a master password option, the only in-browser solution would be to disconnect your account on chrome://settings/personal. Your operating system already offers a more logical solution, of course: automatically password-locking your workstation when it’s idle.
Chrome OS offers this functionality as part of its security toolkit, and it would make sense for Google to introduce something similar in the Chrome browser for other platforms — or at least to make with a master password option already. Other Chromium-based browsers (like Flock and RockMelt) have managed to implement it already, so why not the genuine article?
Download Google Chrome Canary and take automatic sign-on for a spin

Monday, September 5, 2011

New generation of airships to transport goods around the world


Airships are set to return to the skies in a Nasa project aimed at revolutionising the way cargo is transported around the world.

The space agency is developing the new generation of airships, which it believes will replace lorries, trains and ships as means of carrying freight.
The first prototype is expected to make its maiden voyage next year and scientists leading the project predict airships capable of carrying hundreds of tonnes of cargo at a time will be airborne by the end of the decade.
It comes more than 70 years after the Hindenburg disaster, which brought an end to the earlier airship era.
However, the development of modern materials and aerodynamics knowledge gained from the space race means that the new generation will be capable of safely carrying loads that could not be managed in the past.
Dr Simon Worden, director of the Nasa Ames Research Center in California, said: "Currently the majority of goods are put on trucks and trains to be transported around the country.

Get real-time view of solar system

NASA is giving the public a new interactive web-based tool to explore the solar system like never before. The “Eyes on the Solar System” interface combines video game technology and NASA data to create an environment for users to ride along with agency spacecraft and explore the cosmos. 
Users may experience missions in real-time, and even travel through time.
“This is the first time the public has been able to see the entire solar system and our missions moving together in real-time,” said Jim Green, director of NASA''s Planetary Science Division at the agency''s Headquarters in Washington.
“It demonstrates NASA''s continued commitment to share our science with everyone,” he added.
The virtual environment http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/eyes uses the Unity game engine to display models of planets, moons, asteroids, comets and spacecraft as they move through our solar system.
With keyboard and mouse controls, users cruise through space to explore anything that catches their interest.
“You are now free to move about the solar system,” said Blaine Baggett, executive manager in the Office of Communication and Education at NASA''s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif. “See what NASA''s spacecraft see -- and where they are right now -- all without leaving your computer.”
The playback rate can be sped up or slowed down. Point of view can be switched from faraway to close-up to right “on board” spacecraft. Location, motion and appearance are based on predicted and reconstructed mission data.
Dozens of controls on a series of pop-up menus allow users to fully customize what they see, and video and audio tutorials explain how to use the tool''s many options. Users may choose from 2-D or 3-D modes, with the latter simply requiring a pair of red-cyan glasses to see

The ,Sony Ericsson's Xperia Arc S that can take 3D pictures which is comming soon


LONDON: Sony Ericsson has announced its new line of smartphones, which can take 3D panoramicimages on a standard 2D camera - the first of its kind on the mobile phone market. 

Pictures taken on the new, top-of-the-range Xperia Arc S can be viewed on any compatible television set. 

The phone, however, will display them only in two dimensions. Nor will it be able to produce 3D video output, reports the Daily Mail. 

The camera works by taking several simultaneous images and 'stitching' them together. 

The phone, which runs Google's Android operating system, has a 4.2" screen and the camera definition is 8.1 megapixels, according to the Sunday Telegraph. 

Any 3D images are viewed by connecting the phone to a 3D TV using the HDMI output. 

The company said the Arc S will come in five colours - white, blue, silver, black and pink. 

The device was unveiled at the IFA technology fair in Berlin.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

modicare shining up with the new network plan

The network marketing company i.e, modicare has came up with a new network marketing plan
  earlier the  marketing plan was called as sunflower system but now the new marketing plan name is called as
 
        mximizer plan   















it has good income when compared to the old one's
for more details on new plan please visit www.modicare.com





About modicare
Part of the KK Modi Group and one of the pioneer network marketing companies in India. Claims to have started operation in 1996 with 400 consultants in Delhi .Present in over 39 cities with over10 lac consultants across the country. Pat of the executive committee of IDSA.

In Business Since:
 1996 (as per Company Website)


Financial Strength:
 Worth 180crores in 2002.


Management:

Part of the KK Modi Group and one of the pioneer network marketing companies in India had a pretty solid management team. Present. Not to be seen anymore. The fact that the main company site has been reported an attack site by Google, AL the same the company management is ignorant.


Online Training & Support:
Not Al yet there online. Heavily focused on business promotion through traditional means. As part of the marketing strategy, the company has designed a mini supermarket, with branding in the form of a neon signage and display panels that facilitate easy and quick access. Training events are a held in hotel and halls.


Motivational Support:

Excellent corporate sponsored conventions and distributor lead regional events. These events are held by top Modicare consultants, who are among the highest income earners in the industry, with huge organizations.


Products/Services:
  • Product Range Includes
  • Agricultural
  • Auto care
  • Cosmetic and skin care
  • Home care
  • Nutrition health and wealth
  • Personal care
  • Triactiv products
highest kinds are available now
Advantages: 
  • Daily consumable products
  • Affordable price
Old and stable company

generates high good income 

good marketing plan